Derbyshire Constabulary

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Derbyshire Constabulary
Derbyshire Constabulary
Derbyshire Constabulary area
Coverage
Area Derbyshire inc. Derby
Size 2,625 km²
Population 1 million
Operations
Formed April 1st 1967
HQ Ripley
Budget {{{budget}}}
Officers 2,065
Divisions 'A', 'B', 'C' 'D' and 'O'
Stations Alfreton
Belper
Heanor
Ilkeston
Long Eaton
Ripley
Ashbourne
Bakewell
Buxton
Chapel-en-le-Frith
Glossop
Matlock
Bolsover
Chesterfield
Clay Cross
Dronfield
Killamarsh
Shirebrook
Staveley
Derby North
Derby East
Pear Tree
Swadlincote
Chief Constable Mick Creedon
Image:Derbyshireconstabulary.gif
Website http://www.derbyshire.police.uk/

Derbyshire Constabulary is the Home Office police force responsible for policing the county of Derbyshire, England. The force covers an area of over 1,000 square miles (3,000 km²) with a population of just under one million.

Contents

To police the county the force is divided into four territorial divisions, based respectively in the towns of Ripley ('A' Division - policing the local authority districts of Amber Valley and Erewash and the villages of South Normanton and Pinxton which lie within the boundaries of Bolsover District Council), Buxton ('B' Division - covering High Peak and Derbyshire Dales District Council areas), Chesterfield ('C' Division - Chesterfield, NE Derbyshire and Bolsover), and Derby ('D' Division - policing the city of Derby and the district of South Derbyshire). The Force Headquarters, near Ripley and close to the A38 road, is Butterley Hall, former residence of Benjamin Outram and once owned by the Butterley Company. The Old Hall and later additional buildings in the large grounds house much of the force's central administrative services and the Divisional Headquarters of Operations Division. Operations Division encompasses the Road Policing Unit (with bases at Cotton Lane in Derby, Chesterfield and Chapel-en-le-Frith), Air Support ( North Midlands Helicopter Support Unit NMHSU), a partnership with Nottinghamshire Police), ARU (Armed Response Unit), Dog Section, Uniform Task Force and Road Policing Support (Collision Investigators). The Constabulary is led by the Chief Constable assisted by a Deputy and two Assistant Chief Constables. Each division is headed by a Chief Superintendent - the Divisional Commander - and each division is divided in to Sections, which are led by an Inspector. The force has an authorised establishment of 2,065 police officers, 475 special constables and 104 Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs)[1]. The Chief Officers of the force work in partnership with the 17 publicly-elected representatives on the Derbyshire Police Authority, which shares responsibility for budgets and policy, and is intended to ensure that the public of Derbyshire have a voice in the policing of their county.

Derbyshire Constabulary polices an area which ranges from remote rural locations to busy city-centre and suburban environments. The more urbanised east and south of the county, including the market town of Chesterfield and the city of Derby, generally require more officers to respond to the needs of the large resident population, while the more rural north and west require the smaller number of officers to be more mobile. Calls for service in the rural areas usually increase during summer as the population is boosted by approximately twenty million visitors each year to the Peak District and its surrounds. Winter weather on the unforgiving high ground around Glossop and Kinder Scout can also cause problems for traffic and residents.

Derbyshire's different environments also lead to different pressures on the police and different concerns for the public. Anti-social behaviour and drug abuse are more prevalent in town and city areas, whereas the rural districts are often prone more to traveling crime. In general, Derbyshire has a lower crime rate in comparison to its neighbouring force areas of Greater Manchester Police, South Yorkshire Police, Nottinghamshire Police. These neighbouring areas all contain larger urban centres than Derbyshire and as a result criminals from these areas travel to Derbyshire to commit crime. A recent Home Office report indicated that Derbyshire had the lowest crime levels in the East Midlands region, and the force states that crime rates have fallen in Derbyshire by 15% in the last year.

Proposals were made by the Home Secretary on March 20, 2006 to integrate groups of police forces in England and Wales into 'strategic' forces, which he saw as being more 'fit for purpose' in terms of combating terrorism and organised crime. Under these proposals Derbyshire would have merged with nearby forces to create an 'East Midlands Police'.[2] However, these proposals were unpopular with much of the community and the police, and for the moment have been deferred, leaving the East Midlands forces to continue independently.

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